Macrosteles fieberi (Edwards, 1889)

Tishechkin, D. Yu., 2024, New data on the male calling signals of Palearctic Deltocephalinae (Homoptera: Cicadellidae), Russian Entomological Journal 33 (1), pp. 9-21 : 13

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.15298/rusentj.33.1.02

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10952985

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D36A879C-EE05-FFC4-FEDB-F904FB1AFCC7

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Macrosteles fieberi (Edwards, 1889)
status

 

11. Macrosteles fieberi (Edwards, 1889) View in CoL

Figs 42–49 View Figs 38–49 .

MATERIAL. Moscow Oblast, Voskresenskiy Region, environs of Beloozerskiy Town, the bog in the floodplain of the Moskva River near Mikhalyovo Village , 20.VIII.2021, signals of four males recorded at 26 °C .

SIGNALS. The male calling signal is a phrase consisting of two or three different pulse sequences ( Figs 42–45 View Figs 38–49 ). The duration of the first sequence is 1.5– 3.0 s, the pulse repetition period in it is about 120–150 ms; the pulse temporal pattern is very variable ( Fig. 46 View Figs 38–49 , the beginning of the oscillogram). Sometimes this sequence is reduced to a few pulses or is absent. The duration of the second sequence is about 0.8– 1.2 s; it consists of pure-tone pulses following each other with a period of 39–41 ms ( Figs 46–48 View Figs 38–49 ). The duration of the third sequence is 1.8– 2.7 s; it consists of pulses with a noise frequency spectrum, following each other with a period of 31–36 ms ( Figs 47, 49 View Figs 38–49 ). The total duration of a phrase consisting of three parts is 5.0– 6.7 s. If the first part of the phrase is missing, it is reduced to 2.5– 4.0 s.

REMARKS. Calling signals of four species of the genus Macrosteles Fieber, 1866 from European Russia and two morphologically similar forms of Macrosteles fascifrons (Stål, 1858) from North America were previously described [ Purcell, Loher, 1976; Tishechkin, 2000]. Judging by these data, calling signals in representatives of this genus are characterized by great diversity and, as a rule, a complex temporal pattern, and are often completely dissimilar in different species.

A remarkable feature of signals of M. fieberi is a combination of pure-tone and noise components.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Cicadellidae

SubFamily

Deltocephalinae

Tribe

Macrostelini

Genus

Macrosteles

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